The Spam Police

(March 19, 2009) Attention is the primary online currency. People do things to get attention. Other people do things by giving attention. As it is in any economy, the market seeks a balance between value given and value received.

Unlike a nation, whose currency is regulated, the internet is a barter economy. What looks like a lot of attention to one might well be insignificant to another.

There seems to be a connection between the need for attention and some personality types. My theory is that there is an aspect of personality that is the lens through which attention is viewed. A little attention is too much for some. A lot of attention is too little for others. It's rare to encounter someone who feels that they have it 'just right'.

In any case, attention can be intoxicating. In Animal's interview with William Tincup (an amazing series in an amazing website that you ought to peruse), the old howler warmly recalls an episode in which I pointed out the difficult consequences of attention. Then as now, I am sure that micro-celebrity has harsh consequences on its early victims. Managing the glare of the spotlight requires some experience. Virtually everyone makes the same mistakes when first confronted with being 'well known'.

When people complain about Spam, they are really complaining about not getting a good return on their attention. Everyone I know is certain that they can easily identify spam when they see it. Usually it boils down to "My very targeted value laden email is your spam and vice versa." In other words, when I consumed your spam, I got less than I gave.

The essence of web economics (and any economics) is to give more value that you receive. Spam inverts the formula and takes small increments of value from many, many people. With solid roots in direct marketing theory, spam is one of those excesses that is impossible to correct.

Here's why.

If the thought police arrive en masse to yell at a supposed spammer, the net result is more and more viewing of the spam. For a relatively small price (unhappy people somewhere out there in cyberspace), a spammer on RBC can have his/her posting held in the spotlight for a very long time. By trying to embarrass the spammer into submission, the lynch mob gives the piece the attention and reach it needs. So, enforcement is exactly what the spammer hopes for.

On the other hand, the absence of enforcement leads to being nibbled to death by an avalanche of irritating nonsense. You are damned if you do and damned if you don't. That means good filtering and the willingness to ignore the ridiculous are the base strategies in spam management.

Much of the art of building and managing online community is a balancing act. Great community managers have a gift for sensing where the middle of the road is. Rather than policing a problem, they redesign to avoid it. The essence of the approach is to remove the ways that attention is rewarding inappropriate behavior. Sometimes, the community can do this on its own. But, too often, that leads to an intimidating lynch mob. Really great community managers gracefully move the attention away from unwanted behavior.

Rule making doesn't work. Policing rewards the bad behavior. Lynch mobs intimidate novices. Public thought experiments (another form of attention robbery) usually tear up the public space disrespectfully.

You can tell its going to get nasty when the bullies and attention thieves wrap themselves in the rhetoric of free speech. It's a tactic for the vocal minority to impose order on the majority by making it too risky to write. Claiming free speech while suppressing it is the ultimate mind-fuck.

In the best of all worlds, kindness and compassion prevail. Learning to grasp the fact that those letters and pixels on your screen are actually other people is unnatural and takes time.

 

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I read this today and was reminded of our conversation earlier in the week, again with this post: Monetizing attention
That's a great link, Ami. Andrew Keen is a guy worth following to keep your mind fresh.

Thinking about attention as a currency takes some getting used to. The reason that Recruiters (and the organizations that want to hire great people) need to understand it is that it's the a part of the new economic environment. Every single method of attracting candidates requires that we compete with other entities for their attention.

This is why certain components of the Recruiting - HR industry are going to get much more expensive while other parts will get cheaper and cheaper.

That's really the difference between so called passive and active candidates. The price of the attention of a passive candidate is higher than the price for an active candidate. (Obviously, it's a spectrum, not a binary distinction)

In the old days, employment messages did not have so many other things to compete with.

The idea of building long term relationships in advance of the need to hire is really about cost-effectiveness. As the world gets jammed with more and more entities competing for attention, long term relationships will grow in value. Investments made today will pay big dividends in the years to come.
Well John there is spam, and then there is spam. Unsolicited emails are one thing, blog posts another. If you spam an offering here and it gets a lot of comments, that hardly means you have reached a target in a way that leads to a sales conversion- exactly the opposite may occur- you just branded your offering as junk to lots of people who could have thought otherwise.

But you are very right in one key aspect; a good community manager will run things in ways that keep good content flowing, that edits and removes junk, and engages the right cross-section of people in ways that are healthy for the community. All communities have lifecycles and are best suited for certain types of individuals; the manager figures out the who and the when, which is both a function of his or her judgement and the technology they have at their disposal.

I have noted a number of times that Jason's energy, basic fairness, and capitalist nature draw lots of people to support his efforts, but I think he has hit a technical bump recently because he needs more control of his frontpage to keep good content fresh and wash away junk faster. Knowing Jason, he knows and will respond sooner rather than later, and you will have a different dynamic in the next phase of RBC.

Finally, if someone has a legit offering not related to ED treatments, home loans, credit repair, or the sundry other classic spam flavors, most people would not mind a one or two liner to hear about it: once. The second and third times will start to hurt if they are unbidden, even if its a quality offering.

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